
Persecution 
"Persecution is always the first law
of any society because it is easier to suppress
criticism than to meet it." Wise words
coming from a wise man. I just finished reading
a book called 'Challenges and Hopes' that
recounts a number of real stories coming
from the suffering Catholic Church in China.
These stories speak of heroism and of hope.
A Chinese priest, pastor of a small parish
of around two hundred Catholics, was prohibited
from functioning as a priest and was assigned
to work as a carrier of charcoal. This was
very tough for him because he was not used
to do this kind of heavy manual labor. In
the beginning, he entered in a deep crisis
of faith. "Is this the reward I get
for remaining faithful to my priesthood?"
Carrying heavy loads of coal on one's shoulder
and delivering it to homes can break the
spirit of many.
Then he realized that perhaps God is marking
a new way of evangelizing for him. He started
living his job in a Christian spirit. He
could not preach with words but he could
preach with his attitude.
Thirty years later he was allowed to go back
to his parish and resume his ministry. Now
over eight hundred people crowd his Church
because the people remember him as the old
charcoal carrier and they remember the spirit
by which he did his job of carrying coal!
Another story. The water prison is cruel
torture. Two prisoners are put back to back
seated on a concrete table in a small dark
dungeon flooded with water. They have no
space to move until bedtime; only the table
is above the water level. After forty days
in these conditions, the prisoners either
go crazy or are so distraught psychologically
that they are ready to sign any confession.
A number just fall in the water and are drowned.
This Catholic priest was put in this water
prison with a companion who was bitter and
cursing from day one. In contrast, the priest
decided to make a private retreat and spend
the time meditating! Before long, the non-Christian
became curious as to how his companion could
be so serene. He began to ask questions.
It was not long before this angry, sour man
changed completely and one day asked the
priest, "There is water here, what is
to prevent me from being baptized?"
And so the priest baptized him just as Philip
baptized the Ethiopian eunuch in the Acts
of the Apostles! Water torture became an
occasion of conversion!
This other story is amazing. He was an intellectual,
non Catholic. She was a doctor, a Catholic.
They got married and had one son. During
one of the popular revolutions, he was deported
and sent to a labor camp. The separation
was very difficult for the wife who now had
to work long hours during the day and care
for their son during the night. Every night
the mother and the son would pray together.
Then, there was the pressure from the government
to divorce her husband, renounce her religion
and thus gain a number of political advantages.
She refused.
Years passed. One day the news came that
her husband and other intellectuals were
being allowed to go home. When the day arrived,
she went to the railway station to greet
her husband back. Looking around her, she
was surprised to discover that she and her
son were the only family members on the platform
welcoming the men back. None of the other
women had been able to endure the long separation;
they had all divorced and remarried.
When her husband saw this, he was so deeply
touched that he asked to become a catechumen.
Today he is a Catholic.
This also is remarkable. During the cultural
revolution of the late sixties, a priest
was put on public trail and was sentenced
to death. A boy, the nephew of the priest,
was present when his uncle was shot by a
firing squad. He heard the rifles being fired
and he saw the bullet enter his uncle's heart.
"I saw a fountain of blood coming out
of his heart!" It was at that moment
that he heard a voice within him, saying
'You must become a priest to finish your
uncle's work'. Today he is a seminarian studying
to become a priest…
"Alas, how many have been persecuted
for the wrong of having been right?"
Even now. Even here!
(c) Fr. Pius Sammut, OCD. Permission
is
hereby granted for any non-commercial
use,
provided that the content is unaltered
from
its original state, if this copyright
notice
is included.
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